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OKLAHOMA CITY and RIVERSIDE, CALIF., September 2, 2005Encore
Pharmaceuticals Inc., a California-based biotechnology company, has received
a $100,000 Phase 1 Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) award from the
National Institute on Aging. The grant will support collaborative research
and development in the field of neuroinflammation between Encore and
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation scientist Kenneth Hensley, Ph.D.
The award will fund focused research on molecular targets in
experimental models of Huntington's disease, a hereditary, degenerative
brain disorder for which there is currently no effective treatment or cure.
The grant will also support the expansion of discovery efforts for
Huntington's and other neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases such
as Parkinson's disease and amyotropic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or Lou
Gehrig's disease).
"These brain diseases are very similar in many ways," said Hensley, who
is also president of the Oklahoma chapter of the Huntington's Disease
Society of America. "We're now developing small molecules for the treatment
of ALS, and we hope to test these compounds in experimental models of
Huntington's disease as well."
This is the second SBIR grant that will fund collaboration between
Encore and OMRF. Last month, Encore received a Phase 2 SBIR award of
$750,000 to support early pharmaceutical development of a lead drug
candidate for ALS and Huntington's. The molecule was identified in a
previous collaboration between OMRF and ENcore under an SBIR Phase 1 award.
About Encore
A privately owned biopharmaceutical research and development company
with offices located in California and Ohio, Encore (www.encorepharma.com)
is focused on the discovery and early development of proprietary technology
in both the pharmaceutical and nutritional fields. Encore's research and
development of lead drug and product candidates is focused on treatment of
the major disorders associated with aging such as metabolic syndrome,
cancer, neurodegenerative diseases and cardiovascular disease.
About OMRF:
Chartered in 1946, OMRF
(www.omrf.org)
is a nonprofit biomedical research institute dedicated to understanding and
curing human disease. Its scientists focus on such critical research areas
as Alzheimers disease, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease. OMRF is
home to Oklahoma's only member of the National Academy of Sciences.
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